Summary of Lindsey Fitzharris s The Butchering Art
29 pages
English

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29 pages
English

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Description

Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 Lister’s father, Joseph Jackson Lister, was a scientist who made many discoveries in optics. He was the couple’s fourth child and second son. Lister was born on April 5, 1827. He had many opportunities to explore miniature worlds with the microscope while he was growing up.
#2 Lister was a surgeon, and he was very against the use of foreign substances in medicine. He believed that the healing power of nature was the most important factor in healing, and that Providence was the most important role in the healing process.
#3 Lister was a preoccupied boy that summer of 1841, and he declared, I got almost all the meat off; and I think all the brains out … [before] putting it into the macerating tub. He did this to soften the remaining tissue on the skull.
#4 Lister, who was from a small village near London, found himself very far from the life he had known when he began his studies at University College London at the age of seventeen. The city was covered in a layer of soot. Everything was covered in a layer of soot.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 avril 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781669375142
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0150€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Insights on Lindsey Fitzharris's The Butchering Art
Contents Insights from Chapter 1 Insights from Chapter 2 Insights from Chapter 3 Insights from Chapter 4 Insights from Chapter 5 Insights from Chapter 6 Insights from Chapter 7 Insights from Chapter 8 Insights from Chapter 9 Insights from Chapter 10 Insights from Chapter 11
Insights from Chapter 1



#1

Lister’s father, Joseph Jackson Lister, was a scientist who made many discoveries in optics. He was the couple’s fourth child and second son. Lister was born on April 5, 1827. He had many opportunities to explore miniature worlds with the microscope while he was growing up.

#2

Lister was a surgeon, and he was very against the use of foreign substances in medicine. He believed that the healing power of nature was the most important factor in healing, and that Providence was the most important role in the healing process.

#3

Lister was a preoccupied boy that summer of 1841, and he declared, I got almost all the meat off; and I think all the brains out … [before] putting it into the macerating tub. He did this to soften the remaining tissue on the skull.

#4

Lister, who was from a small village near London, found himself very far from the life he had known when he began his studies at University College London at the age of seventeen. The city was covered in a layer of soot. Everything was covered in a layer of soot.

#5

Before the passing of the Public Health Act in 1848, which established the General Board of Health and initiated a sanitarian revolution, the city of London was crawling with hidden dangers. Everything was contaminated with toxic substances, from the food that was consumed to the water that people drank.

#6

The city of London was growing rapidly, and the university was part of this urban growth. The university was built to be secular, and it featured traditional subjects like those taught at Oxford and Cambridge, as well as new ones, such as geography and architecture.

#7

When he arrived at the University of Glasgow, Lister was classed as a sober character. He was classed as a religious person, and as such, he wore somber colors and addressed others using antiquated pronouns.

#8

Lister took up residence at 28 London Street, near the university, and lived there with a fellow Quaker named Edward Palmer. Palmer was one of Robert Liston’s assistants, and he was extremely devout. Lister became more withdrawn the longer he lived under Palmer’s supervision.

#9

The term medical student had become a byword for vulgar riot and dissipation. Surgical students were different, as they were hardworking and diligent. They lived frugally, hocking watches in the local pawnbrokers’ shops to pay for medical equipment.

#10

The amputation knife was one of the few instruments that underwent significant design changes in the first half of the nineteenth century. It was created to cut through the skin, thick muscles, tendons, and tissues of the thigh with a single slice.

#11

The microscope was a controversial instrument in 18th century Britain. Some believed that all relevant signs and symptoms could be observed with the naked eye, and that any microscopic discoveries could be applied to the practice of medicine and surgery.

#12

Lister was not satisfied with the lecture he received at the hospital, and he began to conduct his own experiments with the microscope. He eventually published two papers on the subject, which were the first of many investigations he would conduct with the microscope during his surgical career.
Insights from Chapter 2



#1

The deadhouse was a grim place where students could not escape the smell of the corpses.

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